freedom feels like. this what maybe i m wrong to see gadhafi is dead. that s my dream. victory for libyan people. so we re so happy here. now that gadhafi is gone, the national transitional council will draft a new constitution and getting ready for elections. we have developing disaster news to share with you out of eastern turkey. rescuers are scrambling to pull people out of several deadly building collapses caused by a powerful earthquake. the details from nbc s anna bell roberts following this from london. anna belle, where did this happen and how much damage is there? reporter: alex, it happened in the far eastern province in turkey up by the iranian border. the magnitude of the quake, the preliminary estimate is 7.2. now, that is pretty high. but, of course, as you know, what really matters is how densely populated the area is and how robust the construction is. how quickly the buildings collapse or if they can resist. as you can see from the pictures, it s
choice? we ll hear from two of the republicans, michele bachmann and rick san forum. we ll get their thoughts and the other campaign news. speaking of iraq, we got a peek at newsweek s exclusive report on former secretary of state condoleezza rice s new book. we ll discuss that with our round table of cbs news political analysts john dickerson and mitt romney s advisor kevin madden. then i ll have a final thought about robert pierpont, the long-time cbs correspondent who died yesterday. it s all ahead on face the nation. captioning sponsored by cbs from cbs news in washington, bob schieffer. schieffer: and good morning again. we begin this morning with republican presidential candidate michele bachmann. she s in des moines. ms. bachmann, you and the other republican candidates had withering criticism when the president announced he was bringing the troops home from iraq. but secretary of state clinton says this morning republicans should have made those complaints to fo
the news starts now. first to libya. the transitional government declaring after an eight month civil war that toppled gadhafi. you are looking at live pictures of the celb@ation are they being overshadowed by calls for an investigation into the circumstances of gadhafi s death? reporter: massive celebrations now in the eastern city of benghazi after the official announcement by the head of the national transition council that the whole of the country has now been liberated. he called for$énity and reconciliation after eight months of a bloody civil war, which may have claimed the lives of perhaps 30,000 people. there s been celebrations here in the capital tripoli. perhaps more muted, because jalil did ask that there be no celebratory gunfire because he said it was injuring civilians and was of course a waste of ammunition. alsoç, gadhafi s body remains in the city of misrata, after he was captured and then died on thursday. there s been a lot of controversy over what h
you could have killed bin laden. yeah, i could have. bill: caution. you are about to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. bill: hi, i m bill o reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. violence picks up in the occupy wall street protest. that is the subject of this evening s talking points memo. as you may know, my pal, glenn beck, believes the protest movement is just the beginning of a world wide far left revolt. beck bases his assessment on what s happening in greece, italy ask other places. but trying to cut back on entitlement spending and protesters are going wild. with the economy bad pretty much everywhere, there is some sympathy for these kinds of protests around the globe. talking points is not quite as agitated as beck is, but we are watching the situation very closely here in the usa. and there is no question that the violent component of the demonstrations is on the rise. right now the occupiers are clustered in 20 american cities with new
second deadly shark attack by a great white at a popular tourist destination. the latest on the hunt for the man eater. president obama fulfilling a campaign promise to pull troops out by the end of the year. it s raising red flags who say the fledgling government in back dad is not up for the job but it s a challenge they say they are ready for. you have to do the job ourselves. you can t rely fully on the americans. they did a good job but at the end it s our responsibility. molly henneberg is live in washington. hi, molly. why does the president think now is the time to bring troops home. the strategy to the end the war has succeeded. he campaigned on promise to bring the war to a quote, responsible end and now he is following through on it. we ve already removed more than a hundred thousand troops and iraqi forces have taken full responsibility for the security of their own country. thanks to the extraordinary sacrifices of men and women in uniform the iraqi p